This movie took so many unexpected turns it is unbelievable. The most interesting thing is that considering the era when the movie took place, there is such a rich plot and the overall story is extremely intriguing. This movie exhibits many social standards that we often still face today making it somewhat relatable to present day society. Feelings of insecurity was really the main background of this movie and that is what made it most relatable. The way the setting was exhibited through the film, the emotion of the film was captured through that.…
This movie is about Aibileen, who is one of many black women in the US South who work and raise the children of the prominent or well to do White Southerners. Aibileen with her best friend Minnie and a bunch of other maids work with an inspiring writer Skeeter to write a book of interviews about what it's like to work for White families from their (The Help's perspective).…
The Transcendentalists of the 1850s believed in individualism, equality, and optimism for the future, creating a time period where literature and arts prospered. With a Utopian society in mind, the reform of education, women’s rights, and slavery was put into motion. Over 150 years ago, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau wrote individual pieces displaying key transcendental beliefs. As with many works at the time, these papers still hold relevance in the 21st century and can be applied to modern citizens, such as Elizabeth Gilbert. As a novelist and memoirist, Gilbert tells the tale of her self-discovery in three parts in Eat, Pray, Love that each display a transcendental belief. Gilbert exhibits the quote, “My life is for itself and not a…
Regardless of what the plot was intended to be, it is difficult to not be distracted from the message in the film by the poor acting. The lines are not particularly good that the actors are given for their characters, but they are spoken in such a way that the viewer is not as aware of what they are saying, but in the strange manner they are…
friend who is stuck in a marriage with a woman who bosses him around and has completely…
In conclusion, it is clear to see that the two main characters are both different but alike in so many ways. The film consists of all seven deadly sins, weather that was the producer’s intention or not. The motifs present play a critical part in the film, and show what kind of character each person posses. Overall, the film is not your basic love story and ends with a breathtaking…
Watching this movie, I found myself laughing, then crying and then laughing and feeling happy. I found myself relating to the characters, most of them in one way or another which was a good feeling. I saw the insecurity in Evelyn, the way that she is so passive and shy. She is very naïve. She is trying to get her husband to pay attention to something other than sports on television. He comes home from work, picks up his dinner that has been set on the table, grabs a beer and then he sits in his chair and ignores her. The stubbornness of Idgie, she is one that does what she wants, when she wants and won’t follow the rules, even if they are in her best interest. The quiet strength of Ruth, she can be the…
On the whole, the film remains a story of a young man who wishes to live life as a woman in world. The movie is completely overflowing with scenes that are uplifting and tear-jerking. An excellent cast of actors helps A Girl Like Me: The Gwen…
This movie is suitable for most of the public except the teenager nad children. Here is the reason why. In this movie, indecent is include in some of the scene. For example Julia and Winston having sex outdoor. Also nake scene is always happen. It is not saying that sex, naked is indecent but consider this scene is allow for the minority. Therefore children is not suitable to watching this. Second is the implication of the movie. The tone of the movie is satire the political and the reflections of the satire is the core of the movie. Most of the teenagers and children does not have enough knowledge and life experience to understand what the movie want to bring out. For them, they may only receive the surface message of the movie which have no reward of watching the movie. As i said before, this is a very meaning movie which is one of the masterpiece of the antiutopia. However the message inside the movie and some of the indecent scene which cause it was not suitable for the teenager and the children.…
The purpose of the film has social, economic, political and artistic elements in it. In the social aspect, the movie addresses how people should live and act around others. It brings up how a…
Scene focuses on the relationship between Young Woman and her Mother. Young Girl is like a puppet to her Mother, a woman who doesn’t listen and has become a part of automated life. She aims to avoid any questions about life and love Young Woman asks her, and instead says only “Love! – what does that amount to! Will it clothe you? Will it feed you? Will it pay the bills?” When Young Woman questions her mother, she replies, “I suppose I did – I don’t know – I’ve forgotten – what difference does it make – now?” Young Woman fears her life for becoming like her mother is the way of most women.…
The three aspects of the film that illustrate the healing effect of story on human life are the direction,the funny scenes and the music. The way Roberto Benigni directed the film he is showing that life is not about laughter only. At first I didn't expect the film to have a lonely part, in life you don't know what is going to happen next and what to expect. One funny scene that i love is when Dora is been stung by a wasp and Guido asked her if she is stung in other places. The music of the movie is so calming and everytime I hear it I feel like I'm in a disco or a dance ball in the…
Martin Luther was portrayed in the film as being a very educated man especially in the biblical text. He was however also portrayed as being a sort of mental wreck this is shown by how he acted in the several scenes that seemed to be in his living quarters at night when he would argue with himself and the devil. Martin Luther was respected by his teacher but his teachers colleagues did not approve of some of his behavior.…
The viewer is provoked and is left in anticipation to the very end of the movie. The most challenging answers come unexpectedly and in small packages. In this case, the prologue scene of the movie shows a close up of a little girl yawning while watching in front of the television screen. Her eyes do not sparkle with childish enthusiasm but blink with apathy and tiredness instead. The tight frames of the shot along with the murky lighting of the room suggest nothing but physical as well as emotional captivity. The typical for most children playfulness, vitality, and passionate emotionality are all restricted within the limited space of her home. The closed composition of the first five frames of the movie, shot in the house, generates a mood of prolonged lethargy, and a nervous atmosphere of inexorable boredom. What escalades up to the culmination of such a psychological tension is the continuous sound of a telephone ringing. The superficial calamity and the fragile silence of the scene have been irrevocably interrupted. Furthermore, the uneventful flow of the day is naturally interrupted as well. The entire scene is painted in monotonic colors. The sense of coldness and alienation in the house is increased even more with the background weary even voice of the mother, talking on the phone. There is nothing left for the girl to do except to search for a more welcoming environment in the world that is outside her window. A whole new world to be explored by her and she is giving into to it thoroughly and wholeheartedly. The girl does not spend her time thinking and judging the events; she just listens to the sound of the birds, the thunder in the sky, and the flyover with the fascination and curiosity as if perceived for the first time. Trying to escape the sultry atmosphere of the summer day and the boredom of a staying-at-home adult's casual life, she follows the breeze showing…
Tyler Doherty is an eight-year-old cancer patient who loves God first and soccer second. Brady McDaniels is a mailman struggling with alcoholism and the break-up of his family. Tyler writes direct, heartfelt Letters to God as a means of praying his way through his illness. Brady picks up those Letters on his postal route and is touched and changed by his encounters with Tyler's faith; so are many of the other characters who populate the unabashedly Christian family drama Letters to God.…